Be careful though, this game is incredibly addicting. Battleheart 2 brings back the same simple combat engine from the first game, with some nice tweaks.

It also has greatly improved graphics, more characters to choose from, a multiplayer mode and best of all and just like the first game no micro transactions!

Snowboarding at high speed has never been so relaxing as it is in Alto's Adventure. Very simple one-touch controls let you guide Alto and several other unlockable characters down the mountain while getting big air, grinding edges and performing multiple back flips.

With beautiful endless mountain scenery, amazing day-to-night transitions and a mesmerizing soundtrack you should definitely wear headphones , this is a must have on any device.

The developer for this game, Snowman, recently delayed the upcoming sequel , Alto's Odyssey, saying they want to make sure to get it right. Once you play the original, I'm sure you'll understand why perfection is important to the small development team.

Want to get your battle royale gaming fix without all the complexity? Battlelands Royale is the game for you. Pick your drop point on the island map beforehand, then parachute in to find weapons and shields.

You also can chase down weapon drops for more advanced weapons like rocket launchers. From there, you can hide out in buildings and shrubbery as you lay in wait for opponents to step into your path.

What's particularly great about this simple dual-stick survival shooter is that a game rarely lasts more than 10 minutes. This free game is fun on its own, but you can also use in-app purchases to buy new skins and it even has a Battle Pass a la Fortnite you can buy to earn cosmetic items as you play.

You can't really play a console-level quality Destiny game on your iPhone, but with Shadowgun Legends it's about as close as you can get.

This first-person shooter might be the best in the app stores, with a base camp it's more of a city where you can hit up shops to buy weapons and armor, a place to gamble for more in-game currency, a black market for new items, and so much more.

There are tons of in-app purchases here, to be sure, but you can easily avoid them. The gameplay itself is excellent as you plow through story missions, unlock puzzles and blast your way through enemies in order to achieve greater and greater fame.

Find new weapons as you play with unique exotics and other firearms that will remind you of Destiny. Though it's a whole different setting, Shadowgun Legends is basically Destiny for your phone and it will definitely surprise you with its depth.

Escher-inspired puzzle game Monument Valley is a strange, lovely, deeply rewarding rabbit hole of an experience. You control the tiny Princess Ida on a mysterious mission in a place called Monument Valley, made up of non-Euclidean structures populated by belligerent black birds.

The nature of her mission is part of the splendid discovery experience built into the game as you guide Ida around the monuments, twisting and sliding to shift perspectives in order to make your way through the levels.

What makes it so spectacular is that so much care has been put into every single aspect of the game to make it a wonderful experience for players. From the art and music, to the simple control system, to the story, to the gameplay, it gently guides you to think about space and geometry in new and interesting ways.

You can read our interview with designer Ken Wong here. What if you could be the Dungeon Master and the players?

You have 12 adventurer classes and 17 characters, some unlockable, to play. You also pick the battles your players will go through.

There are only two campaigns at the moment, but more are coming, giving the game fantastic replayability. In this game, you're stuck in prison serving hard time.

But as you go about your daily routines, you slowly realize that with the right tools, a good plan and an opportunity, you can break out.

The Escapists uses old-school graphics, but it doesn't take away from the game's complexity as you try to piece together the best way to escape from several different prisons.

You'll acquire tools by stealing utensils from the mess hall, paying prisoners who know how to get stuff from the outside and doing jobs to raise money to pay for it all.

On its face, it looks simplistic, but The Escapists is a fun and challenging time-waster that's great for anyone who likes solving puzzles.

But this one requires the control of not one but two characters. You need to control them together to activate areas of each maze-like level so that both characters can reach their respective exit.

It gets tricky, but the lack of penalties makes it a smooth, delightful experience. Sci-fi and Westerns are the peanut butter and jelly of genre mixing, and Space Marshals really captures the things that make that union special.

The game is a tactical top-down shooter with a significant stealth component that separates it from the pack.

Renegade is one of those games that seems like it would be impossible on mobile, the graphics are just so jaw-droppingly gorgeous.

It really reminds me of a late 90s Sega arcade game in the best possible way. A jetski-style racing video, it sees you, a disgraced former champion, competing against other racers, performing stunts and defeating bosses for a chance to reclaim your former glory.

It's built on the developer's own engine and plays like a dream, honestly. It's also a fantastic way to test your mobile device's horsepower.

This side-scrolling platformer is unlike any other. You move through the levels by "pruning" cells from a blob of fungus, which causes new cells to grow elsewhere on the blob.

By constantly pruning and reshaping the fungus, you learn to guide it into new shapes. It can be moved around to solve puzzles on the levels, collect other organisms and reach the end.

It's a remarkably clever take on the platformer that requires some creative thinking. Dandara is a platformer that has you flinging yourself from surface to surface as you explore a vast world.

It's a multiplatform title you can also get on consoles, which probably explains why it's quite a bit pricier than most Android games. If you can get past the price, though, Dandara has a giant world to explore with cool-looking graphics, tons of mystical creatures and an excellent soundtrack as you try to save the world of Salt.

Platformer gaming fans should definitely pick this one up or watch for price drops in the future, because it's a great game to have on your phone.

It's a strange, beautiful, sad, experimental adventure game about a warrior on a mysterious quest. The pixellated art style, gorgeous soundtrack and unique gameplay mechanics spawned a thousand imitators, but nothing has ever come close to the wonder of Superbrothers: Out There is a game about survival and strategy, carefully managing your resources as you travel the stars.

It's also a tale of ultimate, lonely isolation. It tells the tale of an astronaut who wakes from cryosleep to find that he's no longer in orbit around Jovian moon Ganymede -- in fact, he's not even in the solar system.

He has no idea where he is and has only unreliable alien technology as a guide home. You have to carefully manoeuvre through dangerous situations and manage resources as you navigate the stars -- because when your astronaut dies, it's game over.

And all the while, you have no way of knowing if what you seek is truly the way home. Before Pokemon Go hit the scene, Ingress was Niantic's best known augmented-reality game.

Join up with The Enlightened or The Resistance team and play with users all around you. Play a medieval monarch and try rule without destroying your family's dynasty.

The game style is a bit like Tinder: You swipe left or right on your subjects' many requests and try to bring order and balance to your kingdom.

This game was the first time in my life that I found myself saying, "Heck yeah, necrosis! You control an epidemic and your aim is to spread it throughout the world and kill everyone before humanity can develop a cure.

You have a variety of tools at your disposal to mutate your virus: Each of these can be built up in trees that interconnect, making your virus strong and, as your virus spreads, you gain DNA points that you can spend on more abilities.

You can watch the effects in a newsfeed, such as "Australia burning corpses" and "France removes drug research safeguards". It's tremendously exciting, especially when your virus grows strong enough to mutate on its own, as you race against the development of a cure.

It's based on a real-world simulation, too. Fireproof's The Room series is, everyone can agree, one of the most spectacular puzzle series ever produced on any platform.

Now that the third game is out, I can confidently say that they've been growing in both scope and complexity as the series progresses. The basic format remains the same throughout: Solve a series of puzzle objects to progress to the next puzzle and small piece of the story.

All three games in the series hit that brilliant, elusive spot between mentally challenging and satisfying. And they're gorgeously tactile, beautifully designed down to the finest detail.

I recommend full immersion: A dark room, a pair of headphones and no other distractions. I don't think I've ever seen a real-time strategy game as pared down as rymdkapsel.

It's as much about battles as it is about building and exploration and every aspect of the game is as minimalist as it gets.

You're in deep space and have to build a base using tetromino-shaped tiles, laying them down in a tight configuration to make sure you maximize resources.

Meanwhile, you have to explore and mine the surrounding monoliths, while defending against enemy attack. There's only one type of unit to build and three resource types.

So instead of complexity, you have to focus on planning out the best possible base to get everything done as efficiently and minimally as possible.

It's an absolutely perfect RTS design for mobile. This turn-based strategy game shares some similarities with Civilization, but simplifies the concept into a great Android game.

Pick from several different races with different strengths and weaknesses and then slowly take over the world as you upgrade your technologies, unlock new units, and bring your opponents to their knees.

The game comes with a few races to choose from, but you can get more through in-app purchases. Don't worry to much about learning curve because the game helps you learn the ropes as you play, but you'll soon figure out the best way to capture territory and go for the highest scores.

You can play alone against the AI or against your friends. One of the best things about the game is you can play a single player game in under 30 minutes.

Overall, the Battle for Polytopia is simply a great way to get your strategy gaming fix on mobile. Like its predecessor , You Must Build a Boat is graphically raw, but it's nevertheless pretty danged close to a perfect mobile game experience.

It mixes a tile-matching casual game with a dungeon crawler to excellent effect. The premise is that you need to, well, build a boat, by collecting supplies and monsters to serve as crew.

Each run, you have to try and last as long as you can by sliding rows and columns to match attacks, shields, keys and other items to help you face the perils ahead.

The gameplay keeps you keen with quests to upgrade your gear and boat. The end goal is to complete your boat and get out -- just as the goal in was to reach the 10,, points needed for freedom.

You'll play a valet named Passepartout and must pick a path from city to city. Oh, and you can travel around the 3D globe on a mechanical camel.

Xenowerk is a top-down, dual-stick shooter that has you blowing away mutants in the aftermath of a science experiment gone horribly wrong. You'll need to go deeper and deeper into multiple levels of an underground science facility as you shoot your way to objectives, grab new weapons and make your way to the exit.

You also have a number of extra skills that do things like freeze your enemies to slow them down and heal yourself when the heat gets to be too much.

The eerie soundtrack and dark levels -- with only your flashlight to guide you -- make this game scarier than most, but the lighting effects and near constant action make it perfect for action gaming fans.

Check out Vainglory if you're big into PvP multiplayer battle arena games. Play quick-match games or lengthier battles, depending on how much time you have to spare.

There are over 30 characters to choose from and comes at the low price of free. So it's definitely worth checking out. I was a big fan of the original Hero Academy when it came out a few years ago because you could choose between uniquely different armies and go to battle with your friends in asynchronous, turn-based combat.

Hero Academy 2 improves upon the original with more polished animations and graphics, new challenges that keep gameplay interesting and new "decks" you can earn or buy to try out different armies.

I've only just started to explore the game, but it's already tons of fun just like the original.

Slayaway Camp is, at its core, a Sokoban-style puzzler, but it's what's wrapped around that core gameplay that makes it brilliant.

You play the villain in a series of slasher movies and you need to hit and slay! The graphics are voxel-based, which keeps the gore-fest entertainingly cartoony and every detail has been lovingly designed -- from the "rewind" option when you fall to the scattered bones you leave in your wake.

Some levels have limits or special features such as fires to help you dispatch your victims -- but be warned, they also provide hazards that you need to avoid yourself.

You can also earn coins to unlock special kills. For such a bloodthirsty premise, it's an utter joy. This Tomb Raider-themed puzzle game game is similar in style to the runaway hit Hitman Go, a strategy game in which you move Agent 47 around a board to take out targets without them seeing you.

In Lara Croft Go, the experience is more complex: Not only do you have to take out enemies from behind or the side, you have to navigate crumbling ruins and solve obstacle mazes.

Luckily the move counter has been removed so you can take your time. And each level is short enough that you don't lose too much time if you have to start again.

It's a fresh new take that manages to capture the old-school spirit of the original Tomb Raider. And since it doesn't require an internet connection to play, it's great for plane rides.

You're going to die in Don't Starve. You're going to die a lot. An inventor and scientist kicked out of your safe, warm home, you have to rely on your wits and the landscape to build the means to stay alive as long as you possibly can.

The dark can kill you. Spiders can kill you. Hunger and fear can kill you. Each day, you must gather materials to survive the night, while making sure you get enough to eat, while resources such as grass, stones and wood allow you to craft materials.

When you die, it's game over and back to the beginning to start all over again. It's brutal, tense and rewarding. Plus it's art seems inspired by a mix of Tim Burton and Edward Gorey, which is like human catnip to me.

Crashlands is kind of like Don't Starve for people who got frustrated by the unforgiving survival elements. You're a space truck driver who's crash landed on an alien planet.

You have to gather resources, build a base and gradually craft your way to getting off-world. It's not all aimless, though.

As you progress through the game, you'll find yourself fulfilling quests. This marks it further apart from Don't Starve, which is more or less a sandbox game with the aim being to stay alive as long as possible.

With no such constraints you can die in Crashlands, but you respawn without losing anything , the game becomes a very different prospect, less fraught with careful conservation of resources and more guided and combative.

It is, however, massively fun. If you were a fan of terrific game Rayman Origins, then it's worth checking out the sequel Rayman: Help save the enchanted forest by recovering the ancient stolen eggs.

This game is great for kids in particular, but adults will probably enjoy it too. Words can't possibly do Framed justice: It really is one of the more unusual concepts I've seen in some time.

The entire game takes place in a wordless noir comic. Our protagonists avoid being spotted by law while double-crossing each other. Gameplay is not action-based, but context-based: Using your just your smartphone assuming you meet the minimum hardware requirements , this fitness app can count steps and log activities to help you achieve daily goals.

There are also social features, so you can compete against your friends. It's a must-have really, you must have it for Fitbit users, but also a smart choice for anyone looking to be more active.

Most running apps charge you a pretty penny to access training regimens. That's not the case with My Asics Runkeeper.

This app, for both iPhone and Android, has customized plans for 5K, 10K, 5-mile, mile, half-marathon, or marathon runs. It's also not on a fixed schedule.

Instead, the app adjusts your plan based on your running data. This app will get you off the couch and on the road to victory.

This calorie counter and exercise tracker aims to help you lose weight the old-fashioned way—expending more calories than you take in.

With its smart design and an extensive library of foods, it makes quickly logging the calories you take in and what you burn while exercising a snap.

A barcode scanner makes it even easier to log that post-workout snack. This fitness app also plays nice with other such apps, so your data won't be tied up in just one place.

MyFitnessPal won't give you a whole workout regimen, but it can make you more aware of your habits. Runtastic PRO can do much more than just track your favorite running routes.

This excellent fitness app keeps track of all sorts of useful data and can return information-rich maps to help you plan future outings. It also features a fully integrated music player, for a seamless workout experience.

Use it for cycling, hiking, and walking, too. If you want to record your own podcast , Anchor is likely one of the easiest ways to do it.

This app lets you record by yourself or with friends and build out entire podcast episodes entirely from your phone. Anchor even implements some basic audio editing tools for perfecting each clip in the app.

Recently, the service announced a monetization program for creators on the platform. Marking one of Apple's first forays into Android development, Apple Music brings the company's impressive musical catalog to Android.

It suffers a bit on Android for being divorced from the Apple ecosystem, however. Filled with both up-and-coming and established acts, Bandcamp is one of the most exciting music marketplaces there is.

The app was initially built around streaming songs you'd already purchased on Bandcamp, but now it's a one-stop shop for digital and physical band merch.

If you want to keep your finger on the pulse of music, this is an essential app. Streaming services are all the rage, but if you still keep music locally, BlackPlayer is worth your attention.

We particularly like the Discover option, which shuffles through second previews of seldom-played tracks in your library continuously, until you decide on what to listen to next.

There's also a built-in tag editor and a ton of customization options for button styles, fonts, themes, and now playing notifications.

If an event isn't being organized on Facebook, it's probably being done through Eventbrite. This service makes it easy to manage invites, RSVPs, and even ticket purchasing.

Attendees get handy reminders about the events they planned to attend, organizers can see guest lists. We particularly like that Eventbrite can generate QR codes, making event check-in a breeze.

Android has struggled with podcasts they don't call 'em "Droidcasts," after all , but Pocket Casts is here to help.

This highly customizable app is great for chilling out with an episode of your favorite casts, and it can also sync among different devices so that you can pick up right where you left off.

Time to start listening. While Pandora may have introduced the world to streaming radio, Slacker Radio has refined it.

You can listen to what Slacker thinks you'll like, or try out one of its human-curated channels and playlists. It also has hyper-specific playlists that appeal to particular tastes and moods, such as Yacht Rock.

If you aren't ready to subscribe to Slacker Radio quite yet, you can try out its free version. Songkick is the bridge between the music in your digital collection and concerts in your area.

Once installed, Songkick scans your device for tunes and then lets you see when and where your favorite artists are playing.

If you see a show you're interested in, you can also purchase tickets all from within the app. Add multiple locations to Songkick to catch concerts when you're on the road.

With its huge inventory of music, Spotify has become a mainstay for free, legal music streaming.

You can shuffle through smartly selected songs, find your favorite albums, or explore one of the service's excellent playlists.

Close ties with artists means that new tracks are sometimes available the same day they hit the shelves in record shops. Those still exist, right?

Spotify also offers a limited free version. Though its interface is a bit tricky, Stitcher connects you with just about every podcast out there.

Podcasts are organized by subject, or you can just search for a familiar title. Shows can in turn be organized into playlists for a continuous stream.

Once you've exhausted all your favorites, let Stitcher recommend something new. At its core, Any. You can quickly create a shopping list and have it synced among your devices and even share the list with others.

The app also doubles as a task manager, keeping you on top of what needs to be done. This very capable app sports many features, but we particularly like one called the Any.

Lists are one thing, but building good productivity habits is quite another. Once you start using Evernote , this note-taking app becomes a powerful tool for organizing just about everything.

Notes can be anything—text, images, audio, or a mix—and are organized into notebooks. One of its killer features is optical character recognition, which makes the text in images searchable.

Cloud-storage makes it the perfect tool for organizing the little pieces of a project into a finished draft. IFTTT, which stands for "if this, then that," helps you create custom automations between various online services and devices without any coding experience.

The mobile app makes it simple to set up these Applets previously called recipes on your own or implement any of the community-created ones. IFTTT is particularlly great for controlling smart home devices.

For passing links, web addresses, or clipboard data between devices, Join is a great option. Setup and customization are easy and Join makes it simple to specify which notifications and actions you want to enable for each device.

Unlike Pushbullet , it doesn't require a monthly subscription to use its features to the fullest. Our favorite features are its remote screenshot and screen-capture capabilities.

Mint is a fantastic online service to keep track of your finances, and it really shines on Android. Once you've entered all your information, you can easily check up on your finances on the fly.

Mint budgets keeps you on track for your goals and a new bill paying feature make sure that you never miss a payment.

Be sure to try out the app's excellent widgets, too. If you like to keep your life organized with various to-do lists, then you definitely need to download Todoist.

This app lets you keep track of the tasks you need to get done; you can assign them different priorities based on their over overall importance or organize them across different projects.

It also has a functional, clean design and works across many different platforms. Everyone needs to file their taxes every year. Most people will probably have an easier time using dedicated tax software and some might still enjoy preparing them by hand , but more ambitions filers or those with simple tax returns can get away with using a mobile app.

Among its top features are an excellent user interface, support for all major tax forms, and innovative help options.

If you get stuck at any point, you can just open up the Virtual Assistant, which keeps a running dialogue of the help topics you searched for, or use SmartLook to connect to a tax expert via video chat.

Photoshop CC is a notorious beast of a desktop application, but Photoshop Express is a svelte app, with powerful tools to make the most of your mobile snapshots.

Sure, it'll do the Instagram-ish filters, but it also lets you make fine adjustments to images with a beautiful, simple interface.

It even seamlessly connects to various other services for sharing. The venerable photo-sharing service is an Editors' Choice web service, and the Android app has a lot to recommend it, too.

Offering a free terabyte of photo storage, a truly gorgeous app, and excellent photo and video editing tools, Flickr is more valuable than ever.

Plus, the app connects you to the vibrant community of photographers on the service. Best of all, it can automatically back up photos from your phone.

Google Photos puts the search giant's powerful image-discerning magic into your phone. It can identify faces, even as they age over decades, as well as animals, places, or objects.

You can also search for photos from specific dates or locations. The impressive built-in Assistant can detect clutter or even create collages or animations on its own.

The app is rounded out with editing tools and unlimited cloud storage if you make some minor compromises on upload quality.

Google Photos also extends to photo prints; you can digitize physical photos with the built-in Photoscan or even order a custom photo book.

The recently announced Google Lens can even report back information related to your images or photos by scanning them.

It seems like just yesterday that Instagram was adding video. Then advanced photo editing put it on par with Photoshop Express for image correction and manipulation.

The latest addition is Instagram Stories, which will surely be familiar to fans of Snapchat. With a clean, minimalist interface, Instagram is the king of social photo apps.

With tons of effects, controls over layers, drawing tools, and collages, PicsArt Photo Studio can contend with Photoshop and is one of the best photo editing apps for Android.

If you think it's just a lowly Instagram clone, you're wrong. When you're looking to take your smartphone snapshots to the next level, seek out this app.

If you've ever browsed through image-sharing services and wondered where the picture collages came from, Pixlr is a good guess. Although Autodesk sold this app to RF this past year, it hasn't missed a beat.

This photo editor can do more than just build mosaics of pictures. It has a host of effects and adjustments that run the gamut from subtly artistic to ridiculously bombastic—perfect for giving your images a touch more pizzazz.

Don't get us wrong, some of us love Instagram. But if you want more control than Instagram affords, try Google-owned Snapseed.

This app straddles the line between full-fledged image editor and filter app, all in a sleek and attractive package.

Best of all is the amount of control it gives you over how filters and effects are applied to your images.

It even lets you make non-destructible edits to RAW files and make adjustments to exposure and detail levels. Calibre is the giant of ebook management, and this app is the perfect ahem companion for it.

You can also store your ebooks on the cloud for easy access from wherever you are. What's so surprising is how well it works, and how easy it is to use.

If you've got a lot of ebooks and are ready to cast off the shackles of Amazon, this is the app for you.

The Amazon-owned ComiXology —the iTunes of digital comics—offers a near-perfect combination of store and comic book reader in its wonderful Comics app.

The free app transforms your Android smartphone or tablet into a digital long box that houses and syncs your purchases across multiple devices.

Everything from American football to Brazilian soccer to Indy is available. For those unmissable games, you can set alerts and follow specific matches as they unfold.

It also connects you to videos and news headlines, courtesy of the popular sports cable network. Feedly takes the RSS feed into the modern age, and it's the easiest way to stay on top of all your favorites sources of news.

You can view everything all at once if you want, but Feedly also lets you categorize your sources for focused reading or use its Today tab, which shows you the top stories from each category.

Additionally, you can make Feedly look as simple as you wish, with minimalist text-only layouts. It's a great way to keep informed with the days' headlines and it offers useful integrations with other services as well.

With its slick, streamlined interface, Flipboard is one of the best apps for reading the news. With it, you browse the articles, videos, podcasts, and other media that matter most to you.

The app's signature magazine-style interface lets you explore the day's headlines in a gorgeous environment. The Daily Edition feature gives you the most important news along with themed stories for each day of the week.

Flipboard has been one of our top picks for years, and it's easy to see why. The official Amazon Kindle apps puts all of your existing Amazon ebook purchases at the tips of your fingers, and it gives you mobile access to the Kindle ebook store for impulse purchasing.

Best of all, it syncs your notes, bookmarks, and where you left off among all your devices. The library is an often-overlooked public resource and some are modernizing quickly , but OverDrive brings it back into the fold with the newly redesigned, Libby.

Supported by over 30, libraries worldwide, the app lets you access your local library's array of available ebooks and audiobooks.

Use it to download titles, place holds on titles not yet available, and consume your borrowed content. The only requirement is a library card or its digital equivalent.

Your bag of holding for internet content, Pocket saves articles, images, and videos for later reading. We especially like how it reformats articles for more comfortable reading on a mobile device, and how it syncs content to your tablet, phone, and online account.

With the close integration between Pocket and the Android sharing tools, you can pocket just about anything from your phone. There's no shortage of Reddit apps on the Google Play store and choosing one over another ultimately comes down to preference, but reddit is fun RIF is a great option to try.

The default view features a dense, text-heavy layout which puts the best and worst of Reddit front and center. There's both a light and dark theme and tons of layout content customization options to try out, even if you don't opt for the paid version.

Better yet, there are no ads in either version or RIF and its overall performance is extremely quick. It's hard to do better than Bitdefender.

This app has received perfect scores from two independent research labs, and scans your phone in mere seconds. It also includes excellent phishing protection, powerful antitheft tools, and Android Wear integration.

You're terrible at passwords. Don't take it personally! Everyone is terrible at passwords. That's why we all need apps like Dashlane , which generate, save, and replay login credentials wherever they're needed.

This smart, cross-platform service makes sure that your passwords, payment information, and other vital information is stored securely but never out of reach.

After a major overhaul to this powerful password manager, its appearance finally matches its performance. With LastPass , you can access your saved passwords, secure notes, and filled forms from your Android, and you can also create new ones that sync to all your devices.

The new version of the app ingeniously melds the password manager with a built-in browser, putting the app's auto-login features at the forefront.

Additionally, it implements a host of anti-theft features including remote locate, lock and wipe, as well as the ability to sound an alarm.

You can even lock apps behind a PIN as an extra preventative measure in case your phone gets stolen. Although you need a paid Kaspersky Internet Security subscription to use all its features, some basic functionality is available for free.

It's a top choice for Android antivirus apps. With NordVPN you can rest assured that no prying eyes will see your internet traffic. This app sports an excellent interface, a handy server selection tool, and hundreds of available VPN servers across the globe.

NordVPN's signature feature is its assortment of specialized servers, which are optimized for activities like peer-to-peer downloading, video streaming, and access to Tor.

Tor is probably more famous for providing access to the so-called Dark Web , but it also provides a useful way to connect to the internet while keeping your movements private.

Working with a special browser, Orbot connects you to Tor within seconds. However, we found in testing that it sometimes takes a few attempts to get online.

On the desktop, Private Internet Access VPN offers the protection of a virtual private network along with numerous advanced features.

The same is true on Android, where you can connect to any of its over 3, global servers. This service also has the option to block ads and online trackers, if you so wish.

It might not be much to look at, but it's among the most powerful VPN services available. Your Gmail inbox is not secure. This encrypted email platform offers a range of pricing options, including a free tier, so you have no excuse not to join.

Security and privacy features aside, ProtonMail works like any other email app. Qustodio is an excellent parental control software that makes it easy to manage your child's mobile activity, especially with its well-designed companion app.

Its best features are its browser-independent web content filters and ability to set device usage time limits. Rounding out its capabilities are location tracking, call and SMS logging, and mobile application blocking.

Parents will also appreciate the instant device-locking and panic button options. Amazon is the internet's marketplace ; the one place where you can buy just about anything—and it's cheap too!

On Android, two of our favorite features are the integrated Alexa voice commands and the photo search, which makes it easy to surreptitiously compare Amazon's prices to those of the brick and mortar stores it is killing.

Amazon Video-related functionality has been moved over to its own dedicated app, but all of its other consumer services, including Fresh and Restaurants, make an appearance.

Prime members rejoice; there's never been a better way to stay connected with your Amazon lifestyle. Google Opinion Rewards is appropriately named.

Google sends you surveys that ask you about places you've visited recently and you get Google Play Store credit for your participation. Polls don't come in very often, but you can increase your chances of receiving more, by enabling your location and answering surveys quickly and honestly when they do arrive.

It's not going to earn you a ton of store credit, but it's enough to purchase an app or an album every so often.

Google Pay has gone through many permutations over the years. Formerly known as Google Wallet, this person-to-person payment app from Google lets you easily send money without pesky cash or credit cards getting in the way.

And in that role, it really excels. It's a strong alternative to our top choice, Venmo. The original deal locator for mobile, Groupon partners with businesses to offer low prices to a limited number of people for a limited time.

While the value of Groupon's offerings is sometimes debatable, it offers a useful way to try a new restaurant or a totally new activity in your area.

Pinterest is a social network of stuff, a place to "pin" things that interest you on themed boards. The Android app offers a great way to gather images from around the web for making lists or just collections of stuff that catch your eye.

You could use it to help redecorate your living room or even to help you choose a tattoo artist. It easily integrates with your browser for fast pinning, and you can view the pins of others for added inspiration.

Here's the bad news: Samsung Pay only works on a handful of devices and, yes, only Samsung devices at that. But if you can get your hands on a phone with Samsung Pay, the world is your electronic payment oyster.

Whether it's sending money between devices, paying for something on your phone, or using the built-in magnets to trick card-swipe readers into thinking they've just read a credit card, Samsung Pay does it all.

It's nothing short of astonishing. For all our technical savvy and disruptive startups, physical package delivery is still the backbone of ecommerce.

The Slice app automatically detects shipping details from your email and then tracks the packages for you.

You can watch your precious commodities make their stately way to your doorstep, get alerts when they are delivered, and even receive warnings if they've been recalled or the price has dropped.

In short, Slice is an online shopper's best friend. There are lots of ways to pay for things with your phone. But Venmo has a smart mixture of clean design, ease of use, and social functions that give it an edge.

It doesn't do much, but it does let you easily send and receive payments from friends. And unlike other payment systems, it has momentum.

It's usually the app people ask about when the group is splitting up the check. Airbnb should be your go-to app for finding rooms, apartments, homes, and other unique accommodations when traveling, if you don't want to go with a traditional hotel.

The length of your stay need not be short-term either; some locations let you book a stay for several months, which may appeal for people working temporary jobs in new places.

This travel app also highlights other experiences and restaurants, so you can find out about everything a locale offers.

If you're traveling within a major metropolitan area via either public transportation or personal vehicle, Citymapper can plan all your trip details.

Once you play the original, I'm sure you'll understand why perfection is important to the small development team. Want to get your battle royale gaming fix without all the complexity?

Battlelands Royale is the game for you. Pick your drop point on the island map beforehand, then parachute in to find weapons and shields.

You also can chase down weapon drops for more advanced weapons like rocket launchers. From there, you can hide out in buildings and shrubbery as you lay in wait for opponents to step into your path.

What's particularly great about this simple dual-stick survival shooter is that a game rarely lasts more than 10 minutes.

This free game is fun on its own, but you can also use in-app purchases to buy new skins and it even has a Battle Pass a la Fortnite you can buy to earn cosmetic items as you play.

You can't really play a console-level quality Destiny game on your iPhone, but with Shadowgun Legends it's about as close as you can get.

This first-person shooter might be the best in the app stores, with a base camp it's more of a city where you can hit up shops to buy weapons and armor, a place to gamble for more in-game currency, a black market for new items, and so much more.

There are tons of in-app purchases here, to be sure, but you can easily avoid them. The gameplay itself is excellent as you plow through story missions, unlock puzzles and blast your way through enemies in order to achieve greater and greater fame.

Find new weapons as you play with unique exotics and other firearms that will remind you of Destiny. Though it's a whole different setting, Shadowgun Legends is basically Destiny for your phone and it will definitely surprise you with its depth.

Escher-inspired puzzle game Monument Valley is a strange, lovely, deeply rewarding rabbit hole of an experience. You control the tiny Princess Ida on a mysterious mission in a place called Monument Valley, made up of non-Euclidean structures populated by belligerent black birds.

The nature of her mission is part of the splendid discovery experience built into the game as you guide Ida around the monuments, twisting and sliding to shift perspectives in order to make your way through the levels.

What makes it so spectacular is that so much care has been put into every single aspect of the game to make it a wonderful experience for players.

From the art and music, to the simple control system, to the story, to the gameplay, it gently guides you to think about space and geometry in new and interesting ways.

You can read our interview with designer Ken Wong here. What if you could be the Dungeon Master and the players? You have 12 adventurer classes and 17 characters, some unlockable, to play.

You also pick the battles your players will go through. There are only two campaigns at the moment, but more are coming, giving the game fantastic replayability.

In this game, you're stuck in prison serving hard time. But as you go about your daily routines, you slowly realize that with the right tools, a good plan and an opportunity, you can break out.

The Escapists uses old-school graphics, but it doesn't take away from the game's complexity as you try to piece together the best way to escape from several different prisons.

You'll acquire tools by stealing utensils from the mess hall, paying prisoners who know how to get stuff from the outside and doing jobs to raise money to pay for it all.

On its face, it looks simplistic, but The Escapists is a fun and challenging time-waster that's great for anyone who likes solving puzzles.

But this one requires the control of not one but two characters. You need to control them together to activate areas of each maze-like level so that both characters can reach their respective exit.

It gets tricky, but the lack of penalties makes it a smooth, delightful experience. Sci-fi and Westerns are the peanut butter and jelly of genre mixing, and Space Marshals really captures the things that make that union special.

The game is a tactical top-down shooter with a significant stealth component that separates it from the pack. Renegade is one of those games that seems like it would be impossible on mobile, the graphics are just so jaw-droppingly gorgeous.

It really reminds me of a late 90s Sega arcade game in the best possible way. A jetski-style racing video, it sees you, a disgraced former champion, competing against other racers, performing stunts and defeating bosses for a chance to reclaim your former glory.

It's built on the developer's own engine and plays like a dream, honestly. It's also a fantastic way to test your mobile device's horsepower.

This side-scrolling platformer is unlike any other. You move through the levels by "pruning" cells from a blob of fungus, which causes new cells to grow elsewhere on the blob.

By constantly pruning and reshaping the fungus, you learn to guide it into new shapes. It can be moved around to solve puzzles on the levels, collect other organisms and reach the end.

It's a remarkably clever take on the platformer that requires some creative thinking. Dandara is a platformer that has you flinging yourself from surface to surface as you explore a vast world.

It's a multiplatform title you can also get on consoles, which probably explains why it's quite a bit pricier than most Android games.

If you can get past the price, though, Dandara has a giant world to explore with cool-looking graphics, tons of mystical creatures and an excellent soundtrack as you try to save the world of Salt.

Platformer gaming fans should definitely pick this one up or watch for price drops in the future, because it's a great game to have on your phone.

It's a strange, beautiful, sad, experimental adventure game about a warrior on a mysterious quest. The pixellated art style, gorgeous soundtrack and unique gameplay mechanics spawned a thousand imitators, but nothing has ever come close to the wonder of Superbrothers: Out There is a game about survival and strategy, carefully managing your resources as you travel the stars.

It's also a tale of ultimate, lonely isolation. It tells the tale of an astronaut who wakes from cryosleep to find that he's no longer in orbit around Jovian moon Ganymede -- in fact, he's not even in the solar system.

He has no idea where he is and has only unreliable alien technology as a guide home. You have to carefully manoeuvre through dangerous situations and manage resources as you navigate the stars -- because when your astronaut dies, it's game over.

And all the while, you have no way of knowing if what you seek is truly the way home. Before Pokemon Go hit the scene, Ingress was Niantic's best known augmented-reality game.

Join up with The Enlightened or The Resistance team and play with users all around you. Play a medieval monarch and try rule without destroying your family's dynasty.

The game style is a bit like Tinder: You swipe left or right on your subjects' many requests and try to bring order and balance to your kingdom.

This game was the first time in my life that I found myself saying, "Heck yeah, necrosis! You control an epidemic and your aim is to spread it throughout the world and kill everyone before humanity can develop a cure.

You have a variety of tools at your disposal to mutate your virus: Each of these can be built up in trees that interconnect, making your virus strong and, as your virus spreads, you gain DNA points that you can spend on more abilities.

You can watch the effects in a newsfeed, such as "Australia burning corpses" and "France removes drug research safeguards". It's tremendously exciting, especially when your virus grows strong enough to mutate on its own, as you race against the development of a cure.

It's based on a real-world simulation, too. Fireproof's The Room series is, everyone can agree, one of the most spectacular puzzle series ever produced on any platform.

Now that the third game is out, I can confidently say that they've been growing in both scope and complexity as the series progresses. The basic format remains the same throughout: Solve a series of puzzle objects to progress to the next puzzle and small piece of the story.

All three games in the series hit that brilliant, elusive spot between mentally challenging and satisfying. And they're gorgeously tactile, beautifully designed down to the finest detail.

I recommend full immersion: A dark room, a pair of headphones and no other distractions. I don't think I've ever seen a real-time strategy game as pared down as rymdkapsel.

It's as much about battles as it is about building and exploration and every aspect of the game is as minimalist as it gets.

You're in deep space and have to build a base using tetromino-shaped tiles, laying them down in a tight configuration to make sure you maximize resources.

Meanwhile, you have to explore and mine the surrounding monoliths, while defending against enemy attack. There's only one type of unit to build and three resource types.

So instead of complexity, you have to focus on planning out the best possible base to get everything done as efficiently and minimally as possible.

It's an absolutely perfect RTS design for mobile. This turn-based strategy game shares some similarities with Civilization, but simplifies the concept into a great Android game.

Pick from several different races with different strengths and weaknesses and then slowly take over the world as you upgrade your technologies, unlock new units, and bring your opponents to their knees.

The game comes with a few races to choose from, but you can get more through in-app purchases. Don't worry to much about learning curve because the game helps you learn the ropes as you play, but you'll soon figure out the best way to capture territory and go for the highest scores.

You can play alone against the AI or against your friends. One of the best things about the game is you can play a single player game in under 30 minutes.

Overall, the Battle for Polytopia is simply a great way to get your strategy gaming fix on mobile. Like its predecessor , You Must Build a Boat is graphically raw, but it's nevertheless pretty danged close to a perfect mobile game experience.

It mixes a tile-matching casual game with a dungeon crawler to excellent effect. The premise is that you need to, well, build a boat, by collecting supplies and monsters to serve as crew.

Each run, you have to try and last as long as you can by sliding rows and columns to match attacks, shields, keys and other items to help you face the perils ahead.

The gameplay keeps you keen with quests to upgrade your gear and boat. The end goal is to complete your boat and get out -- just as the goal in was to reach the 10,, points needed for freedom.

You'll play a valet named Passepartout and must pick a path from city to city. Oh, and you can travel around the 3D globe on a mechanical camel.

Xenowerk is a top-down, dual-stick shooter that has you blowing away mutants in the aftermath of a science experiment gone horribly wrong. You'll need to go deeper and deeper into multiple levels of an underground science facility as you shoot your way to objectives, grab new weapons and make your way to the exit.

You also have a number of extra skills that do things like freeze your enemies to slow them down and heal yourself when the heat gets to be too much.

The eerie soundtrack and dark levels -- with only your flashlight to guide you -- make this game scarier than most, but the lighting effects and near constant action make it perfect for action gaming fans.

Check out Vainglory if you're big into PvP multiplayer battle arena games. Best of all, it can automatically back up photos from your phone. Google Photos puts the search giant's powerful image-discerning magic into your phone.

It can identify faces, even as they age over decades, as well as animals, places, or objects. You can also search for photos from specific dates or locations.

The impressive built-in Assistant can detect clutter or even create collages or animations on its own. The app is rounded out with editing tools and unlimited cloud storage if you make some minor compromises on upload quality.

Google Photos also extends to photo prints; you can digitize physical photos with the built-in Photoscan or even order a custom photo book.

The recently announced Google Lens can even report back information related to your images or photos by scanning them.

It seems like just yesterday that Instagram was adding video. Then advanced photo editing put it on par with Photoshop Express for image correction and manipulation.

The latest addition is Instagram Stories, which will surely be familiar to fans of Snapchat. With a clean, minimalist interface, Instagram is the king of social photo apps.

With tons of effects, controls over layers, drawing tools, and collages, PicsArt Photo Studio can contend with Photoshop and is one of the best photo editing apps for Android.

If you think it's just a lowly Instagram clone, you're wrong. When you're looking to take your smartphone snapshots to the next level, seek out this app.

If you've ever browsed through image-sharing services and wondered where the picture collages came from, Pixlr is a good guess. Although Autodesk sold this app to RF this past year, it hasn't missed a beat.

This photo editor can do more than just build mosaics of pictures. It has a host of effects and adjustments that run the gamut from subtly artistic to ridiculously bombastic—perfect for giving your images a touch more pizzazz.

Don't get us wrong, some of us love Instagram. But if you want more control than Instagram affords, try Google-owned Snapseed.

This app straddles the line between full-fledged image editor and filter app, all in a sleek and attractive package.

Best of all is the amount of control it gives you over how filters and effects are applied to your images.

It even lets you make non-destructible edits to RAW files and make adjustments to exposure and detail levels. Calibre is the giant of ebook management, and this app is the perfect ahem companion for it.

You can also store your ebooks on the cloud for easy access from wherever you are. What's so surprising is how well it works, and how easy it is to use.

If you've got a lot of ebooks and are ready to cast off the shackles of Amazon, this is the app for you.

The Amazon-owned ComiXology —the iTunes of digital comics—offers a near-perfect combination of store and comic book reader in its wonderful Comics app.

The free app transforms your Android smartphone or tablet into a digital long box that houses and syncs your purchases across multiple devices.

Everything from American football to Brazilian soccer to Indy is available. For those unmissable games, you can set alerts and follow specific matches as they unfold.

It also connects you to videos and news headlines, courtesy of the popular sports cable network. Feedly takes the RSS feed into the modern age, and it's the easiest way to stay on top of all your favorites sources of news.

You can view everything all at once if you want, but Feedly also lets you categorize your sources for focused reading or use its Today tab, which shows you the top stories from each category.

Additionally, you can make Feedly look as simple as you wish, with minimalist text-only layouts. It's a great way to keep informed with the days' headlines and it offers useful integrations with other services as well.

With its slick, streamlined interface, Flipboard is one of the best apps for reading the news. With it, you browse the articles, videos, podcasts, and other media that matter most to you.

The app's signature magazine-style interface lets you explore the day's headlines in a gorgeous environment. The Daily Edition feature gives you the most important news along with themed stories for each day of the week.

Flipboard has been one of our top picks for years, and it's easy to see why. The official Amazon Kindle apps puts all of your existing Amazon ebook purchases at the tips of your fingers, and it gives you mobile access to the Kindle ebook store for impulse purchasing.

Best of all, it syncs your notes, bookmarks, and where you left off among all your devices. The library is an often-overlooked public resource and some are modernizing quickly , but OverDrive brings it back into the fold with the newly redesigned, Libby.

Supported by over 30, libraries worldwide, the app lets you access your local library's array of available ebooks and audiobooks.

Use it to download titles, place holds on titles not yet available, and consume your borrowed content.

The only requirement is a library card or its digital equivalent. Your bag of holding for internet content, Pocket saves articles, images, and videos for later reading.

We especially like how it reformats articles for more comfortable reading on a mobile device, and how it syncs content to your tablet, phone, and online account.

With the close integration between Pocket and the Android sharing tools, you can pocket just about anything from your phone. There's no shortage of Reddit apps on the Google Play store and choosing one over another ultimately comes down to preference, but reddit is fun RIF is a great option to try.

The default view features a dense, text-heavy layout which puts the best and worst of Reddit front and center. There's both a light and dark theme and tons of layout content customization options to try out, even if you don't opt for the paid version.

Better yet, there are no ads in either version or RIF and its overall performance is extremely quick. It's hard to do better than Bitdefender.

This app has received perfect scores from two independent research labs, and scans your phone in mere seconds. It also includes excellent phishing protection, powerful antitheft tools, and Android Wear integration.

You're terrible at passwords. Don't take it personally! Everyone is terrible at passwords. That's why we all need apps like Dashlane , which generate, save, and replay login credentials wherever they're needed.

This smart, cross-platform service makes sure that your passwords, payment information, and other vital information is stored securely but never out of reach.

After a major overhaul to this powerful password manager, its appearance finally matches its performance.

With LastPass , you can access your saved passwords, secure notes, and filled forms from your Android, and you can also create new ones that sync to all your devices.

The new version of the app ingeniously melds the password manager with a built-in browser, putting the app's auto-login features at the forefront.

Additionally, it implements a host of anti-theft features including remote locate, lock and wipe, as well as the ability to sound an alarm.

You can even lock apps behind a PIN as an extra preventative measure in case your phone gets stolen. Although you need a paid Kaspersky Internet Security subscription to use all its features, some basic functionality is available for free.

It's a top choice for Android antivirus apps. With NordVPN you can rest assured that no prying eyes will see your internet traffic.

This app sports an excellent interface, a handy server selection tool, and hundreds of available VPN servers across the globe. NordVPN's signature feature is its assortment of specialized servers, which are optimized for activities like peer-to-peer downloading, video streaming, and access to Tor.

Tor is probably more famous for providing access to the so-called Dark Web , but it also provides a useful way to connect to the internet while keeping your movements private.

Working with a special browser, Orbot connects you to Tor within seconds. However, we found in testing that it sometimes takes a few attempts to get online.

On the desktop, Private Internet Access VPN offers the protection of a virtual private network along with numerous advanced features.

The same is true on Android, where you can connect to any of its over 3, global servers. This service also has the option to block ads and online trackers, if you so wish.

It might not be much to look at, but it's among the most powerful VPN services available. Your Gmail inbox is not secure. This encrypted email platform offers a range of pricing options, including a free tier, so you have no excuse not to join.

Security and privacy features aside, ProtonMail works like any other email app. Qustodio is an excellent parental control software that makes it easy to manage your child's mobile activity, especially with its well-designed companion app.

Its best features are its browser-independent web content filters and ability to set device usage time limits.

Rounding out its capabilities are location tracking, call and SMS logging, and mobile application blocking. Parents will also appreciate the instant device-locking and panic button options.

Amazon is the internet's marketplace ; the one place where you can buy just about anything—and it's cheap too!

On Android, two of our favorite features are the integrated Alexa voice commands and the photo search, which makes it easy to surreptitiously compare Amazon's prices to those of the brick and mortar stores it is killing.

Amazon Video-related functionality has been moved over to its own dedicated app, but all of its other consumer services, including Fresh and Restaurants, make an appearance.

Prime members rejoice; there's never been a better way to stay connected with your Amazon lifestyle. Google Opinion Rewards is appropriately named.

Google sends you surveys that ask you about places you've visited recently and you get Google Play Store credit for your participation.

Polls don't come in very often, but you can increase your chances of receiving more, by enabling your location and answering surveys quickly and honestly when they do arrive.

It's not going to earn you a ton of store credit, but it's enough to purchase an app or an album every so often. Google Pay has gone through many permutations over the years.

Formerly known as Google Wallet, this person-to-person payment app from Google lets you easily send money without pesky cash or credit cards getting in the way.

And in that role, it really excels. It's a strong alternative to our top choice, Venmo. The original deal locator for mobile, Groupon partners with businesses to offer low prices to a limited number of people for a limited time.

While the value of Groupon's offerings is sometimes debatable, it offers a useful way to try a new restaurant or a totally new activity in your area.

Pinterest is a social network of stuff, a place to "pin" things that interest you on themed boards. The Android app offers a great way to gather images from around the web for making lists or just collections of stuff that catch your eye.

You could use it to help redecorate your living room or even to help you choose a tattoo artist. It easily integrates with your browser for fast pinning, and you can view the pins of others for added inspiration.

Here's the bad news: Samsung Pay only works on a handful of devices and, yes, only Samsung devices at that. But if you can get your hands on a phone with Samsung Pay, the world is your electronic payment oyster.

Whether it's sending money between devices, paying for something on your phone, or using the built-in magnets to trick card-swipe readers into thinking they've just read a credit card, Samsung Pay does it all.

It's nothing short of astonishing. For all our technical savvy and disruptive startups, physical package delivery is still the backbone of ecommerce.

The Slice app automatically detects shipping details from your email and then tracks the packages for you. You can watch your precious commodities make their stately way to your doorstep, get alerts when they are delivered, and even receive warnings if they've been recalled or the price has dropped.

In short, Slice is an online shopper's best friend. There are lots of ways to pay for things with your phone. But Venmo has a smart mixture of clean design, ease of use, and social functions that give it an edge.

It doesn't do much, but it does let you easily send and receive payments from friends. And unlike other payment systems, it has momentum.

It's usually the app people ask about when the group is splitting up the check. Airbnb should be your go-to app for finding rooms, apartments, homes, and other unique accommodations when traveling, if you don't want to go with a traditional hotel.

The length of your stay need not be short-term either; some locations let you book a stay for several months, which may appeal for people working temporary jobs in new places.

This travel app also highlights other experiences and restaurants, so you can find out about everything a locale offers.

If you're traveling within a major metropolitan area via either public transportation or personal vehicle, Citymapper can plan all your trip details.

It has transit information for dozens of major U. Further, it offers multiple transportation options for each city, so if you feel like taking the ferry to work one morning, there's nothing stopping you.

Its top features include Commute, which lets you set up your daily travel to and from work, and an alert system that uses natural language to describe service delays or cancellations.

If you're looking to learn another language, Duolingo gamifies language learning with bite-sized lessons and a friendly interface.

Starting with simple vocabulary and building from there, Duolingo is your guide to learning a new language or brushing up on one you already know.

The more you use the app, the more you unlock and—with practice—the more you learn. Or more practical choices, like Esperanto and Klingon.

Google Maps has been your guide for years, and this excellent app just keeps getting better. With just a few taps, Google Maps tells you exactly how to get to your destination.

It even supports walking, bicycle, and mass-transit directions, as well as Uber. The app's road knowledge is so keen that it can tell you which lane to be in while using turn-by-turn directions.

And because this is Google, you can easily search for locations nearby. Many people fear not being unable to communicate with people from another country while traveling.

Google Translate takes a bit of the edge off, quickly translating either written text or spoken words. You can even use the app to do the speaking for you, and input text through your camera or handwriting.

The app can translate languages with a data connection and 52 when you're offline. The Dark Throne Collector's Edition.

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